Because I will one day be teaching Shakespeare, I want to steer my paper in that direction. My over-all question for my paper is "How is Shakespeare taught in schools?" I'm sure this will change over the next week, but for now I jumped off that question. I sent out 6 emails and a tweet to current English teachers asking 5 questions about their experiences teaching Shakespeare. I have had 3 teachers reply so far to my emails, and my tweeter has returned some great results.
I started following Web English Teacher. She really is great. She has led me to several website on teaching Shakespeare that I love. I can't wait to see what else I can learn from her.
A couple of the sites she has lead me to so far:
Cliff Notes Films: A great and creative way to get a quick overview of the plays. This site is really worth looking into.
Henry V Teaching Plan: Web English Teacher's personal and well done lesson plan.
Digital Classrooms: An interesting article on modern teaching techniques and equipment. Did you know there is a whole day devoted to digital teaching? It's in 7 days!
I've got some great feedback so far from several different geographical areas, grades and if my token male teacher replies hopefully some gender differences as well!
3 comments:
Thanks so much for linking everything and for posting your results about twitter...it always seems to intimidate me so its good to know that medium is working for you. I think it's great that your thinking is always so centered on teaching.
So I found a high school teacher from Florida who tweets and I automatically thought about you and your project. Might be an interesting source to look into... http://twitter.com/#!/LifeLineForever
Just a thought :)
Alica, that is great! I started following this teacher, so I'll be sure to post if I use her as a resource. Thanks for the tip!
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